1951
Dec 25
|
Santa Barbara News Press (Wednesday, Dec. 26, 1951).
QUAKE JOLTS SIX SOUTHLAND COUNTIES. Los Angeles, Dec. 26 - The serenity
and calm of Christmas in southern California was rent by a late afternoon
earthquake that was felt in six counties but caused no damage.
The north-to-south radius of the quake was 325 miles and it reached
110 miles from Santa Catalina Island to San Bernardino. Ventura, on
the north, felt a strong jolt, as did El Centro, deep in the Imperial
Valley and only a few miles from the Mexican border.
REVERBERATIONS OF QUAKE
A 30 inch statue, "Young Man in a Phyrigian Cap," toppled from its
pedestal at the Museum of Art, and was broken in several pieces. It
belonged to Wright Ludington, and was located in the entrance loggia.
Unlike the taller and heavier statuary the broken piece was not propped
by iron rods, but was cemented on a low pedestal. There was no other
damage at the Museum.
The murals in the SupervisorÕs room at the Courthouse suffered barely
noticeable chipping near the ceiling. Plaster was knocked off in small
quantities in various parts of the building, and some light furniture
and books were found out of place.
About 2000 boxes of lemons were quake "casualties" at the two lemon
packing houses in Carpinteria. The boxes were piled up, ready for shipment.
After the quake, however, their destination will be changed. The fruit
was bruised to such an extent that it will go to the by-products plant,
not Eastern markets.
All local hospitals reported complete absence of fright on the part
of patients, and no damage to buildings. At the County Hospital, bottles
toppled in the drug room, spilling about $50 worth of contents.
St. PaulÕs A.M.E. Church at Haley and Olive Streets suffered extensive
damage to plaster as well as to windows according to Reverend Ralph
King.
A chimney fell in at the W. C. Tobey house on Linden Ave, Carpinteria.
Cocktails were mixed on the shelves and floors of liquor stores, with
the quake serving as bartender. Bottles toppled and smashed, pouring
wine and other assorted drinks around the shops in Dionysian profusion.
In a sound sleep when the earthquake started, Arthur Bennett, U.S.
Forest guard, whose day-time duty is to keep an eye upon Juncal Dam,
started dreaming that he was attached by a huge bird, whose great black
wings, flapping over his head, gave forth vengeful sounds. When he awoke
he found himself outside his guardhouse and stumbling down the middle
of the mountain road.
The tremblor played pranks at the Ambrose Lumber Co. yard. The mill
is outfitted with a sprinkling system as a guard against fire. Water
circulated through a 6 inch pipe. The quake burst the pipe, and a river
of water was cascading over the mill when watchmen discovered the situation
and switched off the flow. Also at the lumber yard there is the largest
finished lumber shed between Los Angeles and San Francisco, 300 feet
by 60 feet. The lumber, 600,000 feet of finished material when in place,
stands on end of the shed, and the earthquake threw all of this great
mass of lumber to the ground, but neither lumber nor shed were damaged.
There were some delays in telephone service. Fifteen operators were
on duty between 1:30 and 5:00 am, handling hundreds of incoming and
outgoing long distance calls to and from Santa Barbarans with relatives
elsewhere in southern California. Even trough noon on Tuesday the long
distance traffic was abnormally heavy.
Boy Scouts at Camp Drake were reported safe; in fact, most of them
slept through the quake.
Only little bits of colored plaster on the floor of Frances RichÕs
studio, 112 Chapala St., are left of the stunning fresco portrait by
Diego Rivera, outstanding Mexican artist, of the young sculptor with
figure of St. Francis. The painting was cast to the floor by the earth
shocks and the fresco was shattered. Miss RichÕs large portrait head
of Diego Rivera, was also toppled over and broken. Her head of Donald
Bear, Director of the Museum of Art, fell but was uninjured.
Santa Barbarans, in comparing calendars, note that both the 1925 and
the 1941 earthquakes occurred on Monday.
Aside from glass from a skylight in the Faulkner Memorial Art Gallery,
and a crack in the skylight over the main reading room desk, and books
scattered on the floor, the Public Library was undamaged.
When the earthquake hit, Alvin Weingand, sitting in his new restaurant,
The Harbor, thought a freighter had barged into the dock. Other than
the jolt not a glass fell off the shelf. The lights went out, and the
midnight supper guests ate by the soft light of candles for an hour.
Glass company crews augmented by extra men from a Los Angeles company
went promptly to work Tuesday morning, and predictions were made that
virtually all the shattered window panes would be replaced by the end
of the week. When the MayorÕs office was opened Tuesday morning, the
place was "all wet". A 5-gallon water bottle had crashed and broken
on the floor. Empty water bottles also crashed in the Clerk and Treasury
offices, scattering glass over the floors.
A glance at the City HallÕs trophy case Tuesday morning showed that
building had taken a severe shaking. Several big trophies in the case
were on their sides and two were upside down.
"Was there an earthquake last night?" inquired an anxious woman of
the Police desk sergeant about 8 oÕclock Tuesday morning.
"Yes Madam, shortly before midnight," was the answer. "Well, I thought
so because the plaster in the front room wasn't cracked before I went
to bed."
At least one auto crash in Santa Barbara can be attributed to the
quake. The shaking released the brakes on one of the trucks in the Park
Department yards and it rolled across the lot and crashed the front
end of another truck used for watering the business districtÕs handing
gardens. Front fenders and head lamps were smashed.
Dogs don't like to be rudely awakened by earthquakes. Monday night
they set up an "awful commotion," according to a police report. "But
it was one night we never had a single complaint of howling dogs," the
report concluded.
A bull in a china shop hasn't anything on an earthquake. That was proved
by those in charge of Hunt's Crockery Shop in the San Marcos block,
when they entered the store of china, crystal and crockery after the
big quake had passed its shaking fingers across the shelves.
With the exception of the breaking of the glass in one case, no damage
was reported at the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History.
FRANKLIN BUILDING IS DECLARED SOUND. The Benjamin Franklin Building,
in the heart of the quake-struck section of Santa BarbaraÕs business
district, is structurally sound, Building Inspector Pope announced yesterday
after a thorough study of it following the quake. Pope said there was
some danger to passers-by from the projecting cornices of the terra-cotta
filler wall just below the second story, but that owners of the structure
had agreed to provide protection in the form of scaffolding. There was
no danger to anyone inside the building except from loose plaster in
some portions, he added. Steps were said to be underway to remedy this
condition.
Ventura County Star Free Press, 77th year, no. 42 (Wednesday,
Dec. 26, 1951).
SOUTHLAND QUAKE JOLTS COUNTY AREA -- Ventura County residents got an
unexpected Christmas present yesterday at 4:47 pm, an earthquake jolted
a 200 square mile area of southern California. No damage was reported
from the quake, but Christmas trees swayed, lights danced and other
signs of the quake were noted.
The quake was felt from the Ventura area to San Diego and from Santa
Catalina Island to San Bernardino.
Dr. C. F. Richter, seismologist of Caltech, said the disturbance was
centered under the ocean floor just south of San Clemente Island, about
120 miles south of Pasadena. He said the shake had an intensity of between
5 1/2 and 6 at its center. Southern California's disastrous earthquake
of 1933 measured 6 1/4, however, that is approximately 5 times as powerful
as yesterday's jolt as seismologists measure quakes, Richter noted.
|
1952
Jul 21
|
1952 Kern County, California earthquake on the White Wolf fault at
the south end of the San Joaquin Valley
Santa Barbara News Press (Monday, Jul. 21, 1952).
QUAKE KILLS 11 IN TEHACHAPI; LIGHTER HERE. Two large buildings suffered
severe wall cracks, considerable plate glass was broken, some bricks
were shaken down and nearly everybody got up earlier than usual. But
Santa Barbara was not shaken out of accustomed aplomb early today by
one of southern CaliforniaÕs worst earthquakeÕs in many years.
No one was injured here.
The quake struck with a rolling rumble which rocked homes and rattled
dishes, at 4:59 am, according to the Police Dept. clock. Other reports
were that the shaking started four to six minutes earlier. It lasted
from 30 to 45 seconds, according to various observers. Two much lighter
shocks followed, unfelt by many who were already up and out of their
beds.
Electric power went off but was restored in most areas within a matter
of minutes. In the meantime, residents stumbled about in the dark, groping
for flashlights, gathering up children, making hasty exits for impromptu
visits with informally dressed neighbors, and telling barking dogs to
"shut up."
City Building Inspector L. L. Pope by early afternoon had not completed
examinations sufficient to lead to the conclusion that any buildings
should be condemned. His inspection was continuing.
Seismograph Balks. No official report was immediately available as
to the relative severity of the quake here. A seismograph, installed
in the base of the Court House tower by the U. S. Coast and Geodetic
Survey failed to operate, according to custodian Bob Waugh at the Court
House. He said the device is supposed to turn on a red light after each
shock and to record the number and severity. There was no indication
that he could discover that the machine had operated, he said.
A sealed unit from a seismographic recorder at the Museum of Natural
History was sent in to Caltech so the film could be developed and the
intensity of the shake determined.
Some observers said it was the most severe quake since the "big one"
of 1925. If so, the city behaved very well.
Authorities said the flashes of light which many people reported seeing
about the time of the quake, came from swinging streetlights and wires
being short-circuited.
The two large structures which suffered the most severe damage were
the Carrillo Hotel and the Balboa Building. The News Press building
came through with hardly a scratch.
Damage which was not properly corrected after the 1925 quake is showing
up, Inspector Pope said. "This very definitely proves that where buildings
have been properly constructed to take care of earthquake stresses and
strains they come through in good shape," he added. As a safety measure
he ordered sidewalk barricades in front of several buildings.
Manager Harold Smith of the Carrillo Hotel said there was little excitement
among his guests although the outside of the building was cracked in
several places, particularly on the Chapala-Carrillo corner. A few mirrors
were broken in some rooms but otherwise the structure rode the shake
in good style. Take It In Stride. Smith was unable to estimate damage
to the face of the building. The front face and one side of the six-story
Balboa Building was marked by long cracks, and plaster toppled in some
of the halls. W. C. Common, manager of the building, said the structure
was safe and most of the tenants were entering their offices to straighten
pictures, etc. Little damage was caused inside the offices he said.
"There is some plastering to do inside, and some concrete work necessary
on the front and side," he said.
One room in the business district, at the U. S. Sewing Center store,
720 State Street, collapsed when bricks from the adjoining building,
occupied by Tommy and Franks Restaurant fell on the roof, caving it
in. Paul Conklin, service manager, said 700 machines were buried in
the debris.
Among other buildings showing cracks was the JacobsonÕs FurnitureSstore,
822 State St. There were cracks near the roof, but the building was
reported in good condition.Plate glass windows broken in a number of
State Street stores exposed valuable merchandise.
Another mild shock was felt by many residents of the city this afternoon
at 12:45.
No Gas Breaks. The Southern Counties Gas Co. reported no apparent damage
to their lines or other facilities in this coastal area. They had one
call from a person reporting a gas odor, but on checking, found it "must
have been a false alarm." None of their instruments showed pressure
drops resulting from breaks and service was uninterrupted.
Lemon packing houses in this area faced an Herculean task today picking
up lemons and re-sorting them to remove damaged fruit which would not
break down in transit. At the Johnson Fruit Co. plant here, the largest,
about 370 railroad cars of fruit were in storage, piled in boxes 10
feet high. Many of these toppled over, blocking alleyways in the warehouses.
Slides on Pass Road. On San Marcos Pass Road, two slides narrowed
the road to one-way traffic. One of the countryÕs other principal slide
areas, 101 Highway from Gaviota Pass up Nojoqui Grade, was apparently
undamaged and traffic was not interrupted.
Damage in the Santa Barbara County Courthouse was described as largely
superficial. Some plaster fell from walls in the District AttorneyÕs
office. Cracks appeared in walls in the tower area and around the entrance
to the SupervisorÕs room.
ÔShattered NervesÕ. Hospitals reported no damage to structures and
"just a few shattered nerves."
Assistant Superintendent of Schools George E. Browne said a preliminary
check showed no damage to school buildings. Summer classes were conducted
on schedule today.
Hotel Wall Damaged. At the Barbara Worth Hotel building in the 500
block of State Street, one wall was so severely damaged it probably
will have to be torn down and replaced. The manager reported his earthquake
insurance would be expiring at the end of this month and he had not
planned to renew it because of the high cost.
Men working the "graveyard" shift several thousand feet underground
in Tecolote Tunnel said they didnÕt even feel the shock. Complying with
routine safety measures, they came out of the tunnel when the electric
power failed and pumps and ventilating systems stopped. They returned
to work a 1/2 hour later when the power came back on.
Dam Undamaged. Gibralter Dam came through the quake with no damage
that was immediately apparent, according to City Water Supt. E. M. Thompson.
Inside the city, water seeped through the pavement at least three locations,
the result of broken six-inch mains at Garcia and Ferello Roads, on
Burton Mound in the Ambassador Tract, and at Yanonali and Anacapa Streets.
Thompson said "undoubtedly" a few more will be discovered as leaks become
apparent on the surface of the ground.
A few of the cityÕs regulating reservoirs, full in readiness for the
daytime demand, "slooped over" into the spillover troughs.
SheriffÕs deputies began reporting to duty this morning before the
third and last shake had subsided, according to Capt. E. D. Rhodes,
who was on duty at the SheriffÕs office in the Courthouse at the time
of the quake.
ÔLike A Rocking ChairÕ. "This building rocked like a rocking chair.
If there would have been a sharp jolt in the middle of the first quake,
which lasted about 45 seconds, it would have really cracked things up
around here."
CouldnÕt Stop Shaking. Residents on Las Alturas Road, especially in
the 200 block where the homes are on the edge of a hillside, reported
that houses shook for several minutes after the tremor subsided. Pictures
were thrown from the walls, dishes were shattered and furniture slid
from one to two feet. Windows were out in almost every home, one resident
said.
Nothing was damaged at Mission Santa Barbara, but holy water was splashed
from two big fonts on each side of the aisle in the chapel.
Bottles Broken. Grocery and liquor stores suffered considerable damage
to breakable stock. Most of them opened on time this morning, although
many of them had some aisles blocked off, their floors littered with
jams, pickles, syrup, beer and the like.
Reports were slow in coming in from outlying areas, due to interrupted
telephone service. Radio reports said the Old Mission at Solvang was
apparently undamaged. Ventura reported largely minor damage and some
downed wires. The SheriffÕs radio in Lompoc said damage was not extensive
there.
College Undamaged. The Riviera and Mesa campuses of Santa Barbara
College came through practically unscathed. Bottles were broken on the
laboratories and some windows were broken in the Mesa Building. A water
main broke on the Goleta campus and flooded considerable area.
False Alarms. The quake also caused shorts in two fire alarm boxes.
The shock set burglar alarms off in many downtown business houses. A
chimney was reported as toppling on a residence at 1801 De la Vina St.
The Montecito patrol reported that hotel and motel guests were out
on the streets and that most people in the area reported only slight
damage to their homes.
Little Wire Damage. By 8:45 this morning E. B. Cummings, district
manager of the Southern California Edison Co., was able to report that
all the "nerve centers" of the Edison system in this county -- some
50 big and little substations -- were undamaged. His wire trouble was
in Goleta, Montecito, and on the west side of Santa Barbara.
A broken power line in the 200 block of Olive Mill Road in Montecito
started a brush fire that was put out by Montecito firemen before it
could gain headway.
Crack In Ball Park. Manager H. W. Hitchcock of the Santa Barbara Dodgers
reported this phenomenon at Laguna Park: A crack about 10 feet long
and from three to four inches wide opened up near first base and water
forced beach sand up through the opening, depositing it along each side.
The park is built on filled ground, but Hitchcock said the beach sand
was "supposed to be" about 35 feet underground. Also at Laguna Park:
one of the large light standards was pushed upwards about 2 1/2 inches
from its previous position. The outfield, which had been carefully leveled
earlier this year, took on a wavy appearance, he said.
Water Gauge Rises. Harry Wilson, chief of the U. S. Geological Survey
here, said his recording instrument in an old sulfur well at Rancheria
and Victoria Streets showed a rise of six inches in the water level
immediately after the shake. By midmorning the level had gone down three
inches and was still declining, apparently to its previous position.
In swimming pools the large continuous bottom slab often cracks under
quake strains. A morning check of Santa BarbaraÕs three major pools
- Municipal, Coral Casino and Montecito Country Club - found all three
uninjured and left the assumption that swimming pools were not a casualty
in todayÕs quake.
Glass Stock Damaged. The damage to the local glass companiesÕ inventory
stock, shattered by the early morning earthquake, was estimated at $7500,
but retailers said that there were still ample supplies of window glass
to meet the demand, according to a quick survey made this morning.
Most badly hit was the Tri-Counties Glass Co. Warehouse at 190 Tecolote
Ave. in Goleta. The earthquake scratched or smashed the complete inventory
stock with the extensive damage estimated at $5000.
At Hope Ranch Beach a large section of the cliff caved in on the beach.
One house was down and a half dozen buildings damaged at Taft. The
Maricope Hotel was left without a face as the street wall collapsed,
narrowly missing hotel guests who ran to the street when the first shock
was felt.
(Crack in U.S. Highway 101 - craterlets of sand along crack - most
were dry, some had mud and water; highway dropped 14" for 100 ft.
Location: "just north of where Glen Annie Creek hits highway"
on line with entrace to Bishop Ranch and near old SPRR station at Coromar.
Personal communication from Nelson Martin, State Division of Highways
Transportation Maintenance Superintendent, 5 March 1975).
Ventura County Star Free Press (Monday, Jul 21, 1952).
Ventura County rocked with the rest of the southland early today as
the Ôquake rumbled down from the north, spilling sleepers out of bed
to the sound of crashing dishes in an eerie dawn blackout due to electric
power failure.
No loss of life or personal injury was reported.
One man was hospitalized in Ventura after he jumped from the second
floor of a downtown Ventura at the height of the severe shake.
HOSPITAL LIGHTS OUT - Lights went out at the county hospital just
as the doctor prepared to cut the umbilical cord of a new-born infant.
Emergency power saw the birth through safely. Another baby was born
at Foster Hospital after the first sharp jolt and as subsequent tremors
rolled across the ground at short intervals later.
Greatest property damage was reported at citrus packing warehouses
over the county. Thousands of boxes of fruit toppled. Financial loss
was expected to be high. In grocery stores the floors became a sea of
canned goods and boxes.
Old downtown buildings in Ventura and Oxnard sent a few bricks and
plaster cascading to the sidewalks. The American Crystal Sugar Co. factory
in Oxnard - a towering brick structure 54 years old - shed bricks from
its high front and rear escarpments. A brick smoke flue inside the factory
collapsed with a roar.
Power lines snapped in several places. Repairmen estimated that some
power might not be restored until later tonight. All five circuits went
out in the city of Ventura seconds after the quake. The first lights
came back on about two hours and ten minutes later. In Oxnard power
was restored to all parts of the city except south Oxnard by 10 am.
13 SHOCKS - Firemen at the Simi station reported 13 separate shocks
were felt over a period of one hour and seventeen minutes after the
quake. A 14th "door- rattler" was felt at 8:14 am.
No significant damage was reported at the countyÕs oil fields. Southern
Counties Gas Company spokesmen said there was no damage to gas lines
throughout the county. One minor gas leak was reported in the city of
Ventura. A water main broke in Ventura on N. Ventura avenue. Workers
rushed to complete repairs and bolster falling water pressures because
of the threat of fire.
Southern PacificÕs Starlight passenger train was entering Ventura
just as the first severe shock came. The train was held while tracks
and signals were checked for damage.
BUCKING TEMBLOR ROCKS MOST OF STATE - Los Angeles - A violent earthquake
which felt "like a ride on a bucking bronco" rolled through California
today leaving "many dead and injured" and leveling the business district
of little Tehachapi, 100 miles north of here. At least 10 were known
dead, all in the little mountain town of Tehachapi, home of the California
womenÕs state prison.
The long, rolling waves of the quake, which began at 4:55 am PDT and
were felt in diminishing strength for the next 45 minutes, was recorded
as far north as Santa Rosa, 60 miles north of San Francisco, south to
Ensenada, Mex., 200 miles south of here, and east to Reno, Neveda, and
Berkeley, California.
CENTER AT TEHACHAPI - But the epicenter of the quake, which was recorded
as 7.75 intensity by the Rev. Joseph Lynch of Fordham University and
who described it as CaliforniaÕs "worst since the 1906 San Francisco
quake," was in the Mojave Desert and in the immediate vicinity of Tehachapi.
It was so violent that it set off two big oil fires. One, a huge refinery
25 miles south of Bakersfield, California, 50 miles west of Tehachapi,
called for all the Kern County firemen. The blaze and the shroud of
black smoke were seen in Bakersfield. The other oil blaze was in a field
near Newhall. Six of the dead were reported to have died when the main
hotel of the town of 2,500, an old two-story brick, collapsed. Others
died as they dashed in fright to the street and were caught by falling
buildings.
The Oxnard Press-Courier, Vol. 45, no. 17 (Monday, 21 Jul. 1952).
POWER CUT. Buildings Damaged Courthouse, Sugar Factory Worst Hit.
A grinding rocking earthquake jolted Ventura Country residents out
of their beds before dawn today, with the greatest damage in Oxnard
reported at the Sugar factory and to power installation.
The wild clanging of doorbell chimes bouncing against walls in some
houses joined with the noise of creaking beams and cracking plaster
to waken sleepers. Many rushed into the streets to see the glare of
transformers and circuit breakers going out, leaving their homes in
darkness.
At OxnardÕs American Crystal Sugar Co. factory, brick parapets at the
top of the east and west sides of the factory plunged down more than
100 feet to the ground. Bricks on the west side fell harmlessly to the
ground, but on the east side the bricks crashed through a metal sheet
covering two lime mixture tanks, damaging the tanks and surrounding
apparatus. Workmen Injured - A workman attending the tank, R.D. Arnold,
48, leaped from the tank to the ground when he heard bricks falling.
He was bruised by his jump and struck by a flying brick. He refused
treatment however. Another workman, Max Hollowat, 66, was attending
the saccharte (a sugar compound) filters when the quake slashed solution
into his eyes. He was taken to a hospital but not confined. Most serious
damage to the factory occurred in the boiler room when a large brick
tunnel, which carries gasses from all the factoryÕs 22 boilers to the
smoke stacks, crumbled and fell.
OxnardÕs Masonic Temple at Fifth and C lost ornamental plaster from
the top, and a crack developed in the corner tower.
Several hundred dollars worth of groceries at Oxnard safeway were rocked
from their racks, making a gooey mess of jam, syrup, pickles, wine and
dry goods. Employees, who rushed to the scene shortly after the quake,
did not get the mess cleaned until after 8 am.
Shoes Scattered - Shoes in downtown store windows were scattered.
Within a few minutes of the first shock all available Oxnard police
officers were summoned to duty to patrol streets and check buildings
and set up flares at fallen power wires. About 1400 homes in the Oxnard
area were without power after the quake.
Time: 4:55 am PDT
Epicenter: Mojave-Lancaster-Techapi
Extent: Santa Rosa to Reno to San Diego
Aftershocks for 15 minutes
Magnitude: 7.75 Richter scale
The Lompoc Record, 78th year, no. 16 (Thursday, Jul. 24, 1952).
CITY SUFFERS SMALL LOSSES IN BIG QUAKE. Valley Thrown Into Darkness
When Lines Collide.
Lompoc Valley escaped any serious damage in the earthquake that jolted
southern California early Monday morning, causing at least nine deaths
and millions of dollars of property destroyed. The quake struck shortly
before 5 am Monday. In Lompoc it was felt first as a slight tremor which
gradually increased in intensity until it reached a violence resembling
a rocking boat. The fact that there were no sharp jerks and jars accounted
for the ValleyÕs escape from extensive damage.
Lompoc was thrown into darkness as the violence of the quake reached
its peak. The main feeder lines were slapped together, cutting out the
local substation. After the earthquake subsided, flashlights and candles
began appearing in homes throughout the city. And it was evident that
few if any Lompocians had slept through the quake. Residents of apartments
in the 100 block on N. 8th Street fled their home and were seen lined
up in the middle of the street clad in hastily thrown on bathrobes.
"The Bank of America building looked like it was leaning on its side."
Extensive damage created by the quake in Tehachapi and desert area.
Several stores, including MooreÕs, Safeway, and KarlÕs Shoestore had
their goods tossed off shelves and into the store isles during the quake.
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1952
Jul 22
|
Santa Barbara News Press (Thursday, Jul. 22, 1952).
NO BUILDINGS HERE TO BE CONDEMNED. No buildings in Santa Barbara will
have to be condemned as a result of yesterdayÕs quake, City Building
Inspector L. L. Pope reported to Major Norris Montgomery today.
LEARNED LESSON. Pope also said he had no reports as yet of any serious
damage to any apartment or home building in the city. "As far as we
know, not even a fireplace crumbled in the whole city," he stated. "We
have made a good use of our lessons of 1925."
SEVERAL FLASHES. A low fog shrouded the view of Santa Barbara from
the surrounding hills, but a report came from Painted Cave that many
residents reported seeing green flashes of light across the ocean and
up through the fog from Ventura as far north as they could see. They
reasoned that these flashes were almost simultaneous with the shocks
and continued for several minutes after the first quake.
Minor aftershocks were felt here at about 1:45 am and about 6:30 am
today.
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1952
Jul 23
|
The Oxnard Press-Courier (Wednesday, Jul. 23, 1952).
20 aftershocks, widest felt at 11:14.
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The Ojai, LX, no. 31 (Thursday, Jul. 31, 1952).
SPRINGS, STREAMS RISE FROM QUAKE. Streams and springs in OjaiÕs hills
are showing a surprising rise according to the local Forest Service
Office. A remarkable increase has resulted from the quake in all the
springs and especially at Bellyache Falls, Rattlesnake Falls, and the
spring along Oceanveiw Road, they report.
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1952
Jul 31
|
The Lompoc Record, 78th year, no. 17 (Thursday, Jul. 31, 1952).
LIGHT SLEEPERS AWAKENED BY QUAKE TUESDAY. Lompocans --the light sleeping
variety -- were awakened early Tuesday by an earthquake which gently
rocked the city for several seconds. The quake was the heaviest recorded
here since the initial disturbance on July 21st. Considerable damage
was reported in the Bakersfield area. TuesdayÕs morning shake caused
no damage in the Lompoc Valley.
The Ojai, Vol. LX, no. 30 (Thursday, Jul. 31, 1952).
Tremors Continue To Rock Valley Following Earthquake Monday; Little
Damage Reported.
Rudely awakened Monday morning, Ojai valley residents experienced
the worst earthquake to hit southern California since 1927. Tremors
continued throughout the day. The heaviest one since Monday was recorded
Tuesday at 5:30 pm and another early Wednesday morning.
An Oak View grocery reported $60 to $100 worth of damage in broken
merchandise while Ojai Valley grocers found cans and bottles on the
floors.
The Ojai Bank of America had falling plaster from the ceiling but
no other damage was reported.
The Ojai business area was without electricity until mid-afternoon
although Meiners Oaks and the east end of the Ojai continued service.
The only casualty was a cat which was killed by a falling table during
the quake.
WheelerÕs Resort pool was filled with black water after the earthquake
when the rumblings caused the pipes to shed its residue and chemicals
into the pool. The pool has been drained and refilled ready for use
again. Traffic, which was rerouted through Ojai from Castaic Junction,
was stopped by Rangers on the Maricopa highway at WheelerÕs while landslides
at the summit were cleared. The highway was reopened late Monday afternoon.
Eyewitness Atop Nordhoff Peak Describes Quake - EditorÕs note: In
an exclusive radio interview Monday morning with Herb Lemmer, stationed
at the Nordhoff Peak lookout tower, "The Ojai" was given this eye-witness
account of the early morning earthquake as seen and felt from the lookout
peak. The interview was arranged through the courtesy of the Ojai Ranger
station. by Herb Lemmer: "I was making my regular observation check
of the forest area about five oÕclock this morning when I felt my cabin,
which is perched on high steel posts, begin to shake and sway. I knew
it was an earthquake and as I looked out over the darkened Ojai Valley,
I could see the outlines of nearby mountains moving. The first jolt
lasted from two-and-a-half to three minutes and in the midst of it I
could see a dozen or more brightly colored flashes of light in and around
the Valley where power lines swung together and shorted or transformers
exploded. It looked like a street car or trolley line when the wires
meet and give off sparks. "During the quake the dishes on the shelves
in my cabin crashed to the floor and a Coleman lantern hanging in the
center of the room started swinging in a three-foot arc. The cabin shook
and swayed pretty badly, but was not damaged. After a few moments there
were several smaller quakes which continued for nearly an hour. I was
afraid the burning wires and transformers might start a fire and I kept
close watch, but luckily nothing burned. It was by far the strongest
earthquake IÕve seen or felt."
|
1952
Nov 5 & 6
|
BSSA, vol. 43, n. 1, p. 93.
Oxnard, California, November 5 and 6 - Minor earthquakes were reported
felt at 11:32 pm, PST, on Nov. 5, and at 10:00 am on Nov. 6.
The Oxnard Press-Courier, Vol. 45, no. 102 (Thursday, Nov. 6,
1952).
EARTHQUAKE SHOCKS FELT BY OXNARD AREA RESIDENT. A minor earthquake
was reported in Oxnard today, the third in three days. Mrs. Viva Mays,
said the ground shook faintly 6 or 7 times at 10 am today. Mrs. Mays
also reported a quake at 11:32 last night. "It lasted about 10 seconds
and then I heard a thump." Mrs. Mays daughter, Mrs. Howard Smith, also
reported last nights tremor. So did Mrs. Robert Rump, and Mrs. Rump
said she felt this mornings quake when she was in her yard. Mrs. Dale
Peters said, "My French doors were rattling this morning. A couple of
small vases at the ends of the cornice above the doors were moved toward
the center." Mrs. Peters also felt the quakes last night and Tuesday
night.
|
1953
Jan 13
|
Ventura County Star Free Press (Jan. 13, 1953).
QUAKE DAMAGE SLIGHT AS COUNTY GENTLY ROCKED. A rolling earthquake rocked
almost the entire length of California at 3:34 pm yesterday but no injuries
and scarcely any damage was done. In Ventura County, the quake was felt
for nearly a minute. It partially disrupted telephone switchboard service
at the Star Free Press and caused several cracks to reopen in
plaster at the county court house.
-- The quake was centered in Kern County possibly north of Bakersfield.
|
1953
May 24
|
USDC
1953 May 24 19:24 Wheeler Ridge 35.0N, 119.0W, Int. VI.
Santa Barbara News Press (Monday, May 25, 1953).
SLIGHT TREMOR FELT IN LOCAL AREA. A slight jar was felt here at 8:25
last night, part of a series of earthquakes which shook several California
cities.
The strongest was a "moderate" shock centered approximately 250 miles
south of Bakersfield. It lasted eight minutes. Shocks were felt in Los
Angeles, Hollister, and Ukiah, 100 miles north of San Francisco. No
damage was reported.
|
1953
Oct 21
|
Ventura County Star Free Press, 78th year, no. 298 (Oct. 21, 1953).
LIGHT EARTHQUAKE FELT IN VENTURA. At about 8:07 this morning, a slight
earthquake was reported in the Ventura coastal area and along the coast
to the west. A number of persons along the Rincon and in the city of
Ventura reported feeling the slight earth movement, too slight apparently
to cause any damage. It was believed at first that the jolt might have
resulted from an explosion but none was reported.
Santa Barbara News Press (Wednesday, Oct. 21, 1953).
EARTHQUAKE FELT IN THIS AREA. An earthquake shook this area briefly
at 8:03 am today but did no reported damage to structures. Reports of
the shake came from beyond Goleta and as far south as Ventura and Port
Hueneme. It was described as a "hard, rolling motion." At Goleta fire
station the quake "shook the fire trucks, rattled windows and banged
doors." Montecito fire station reported receiving "quite a number of
calls" regarding the shake, as did local police and sheriffÕs offices.
One resident reported a beer stein fell off a shelf and shattered. Another
said a pane in a French door on El Arco Drive was cracked. Others said
their breakfast coffee splashed out of cups. At the California Institute
of Technology in Pasadena, seismologists said the shock magnitude was
placed at 4, on a scale which rates the largest quake ever recorded
at 8.5.
|
1954
Jan 12
1534 hrs
|
USDC
1954 Jan. 12 15:34 - West of Wheeler Ridge, 35.0N, 119.0W, int. VII-VII,
felt area 35,000 sq. mi.
Santa Barbara News Press (Wednesday, Jan. 13, 1954).
QUAKE PROVIDES "ENCORE" TO BIG STORM. An earthquake of medium intensity
added a spectacular climax yesterday to a combination of natural phenomena
which included hail, snow, thunder, lightening and drenching rain. The
shaker, felt from the Mexican border to Sacramento, had a gentle, rolling
motion here that did no reported damage in this area. It struck about
3:34 pm, with its epicenter located by scientists at the Garlock Fault
between Mojave, Tehachapi and Ft. Tejon, center of the disastrous July
1952 quake.
The Oxnard Press-Courier (Wednesday, Jan. 13, 1954).
County Has Both Rain, Quake. Two Jolts Rock Oxnard... Nor was there
any damage attributed to the earthquake which struck in two separate
jolts at 3:43 pm. The temblor was a heavy rolling quake which rocked
almost the entire length of California. It was centered in Kern County.
The University of California said the quake lasted 15 seconds and had
a magnitude of 6.25 on a Richter scale of 10.
SAME FAULT - The 1952 Bakersfield quake registered 7.50-7.75. YesterdayÕs
fault was also centered on the Garlock fault. The earthquake brought
no damage to Oxnard, but the county courthouse reported reopening of
cracks repaired after the Bakersfield temblor. Several housewives reported
cooking utensils jarred from their shelves.
The Ojai, 63rd year, no. 2 (Thursday, Jan 14, 1954).
The sharp earthquake which centered between Taft and Bakersfield at
3:36 pm Tuesday was felt throughout the Valley, although there were
no reports of damage.
|
1954
Jan 26
|
Santa Barbara News Press (Tuesday, Jan. 26, 1954).
MYSTERY JOLT SHAKES VALLEY. Solvang, Jan. 26 (VNS) - A mystery jolt,
like an earthquake or jet plane blast, shot the Santa Ynez Valley early
this morning, awakening residents and rattling windows and doors. As
yet there have been no reports of any damage. The jolt hit the valley
at 1:45 am and lasted, according to residents, about four seconds. Residents
of Solvang reported that a loud noise, similar to an explosion, accompanied
the shock.
|
1954
Feb 10
1559 hrs
|
BSSA, vol. 44, n. 2, p. 193.
Feb. 10, 1954 - A moderate earthquake was felt in Bakersfield, Taft,
Santa Barbara, Frazier Park, and Ventura at 3:59 pm, PST. Residents
of Bakersfield reported a strong jolt followed by a lesser one. Pasadena
estimated the magnitude as 4.3 and stated that the shock was not from
the White Wolf fault, which was the epicenter of the 1952 earthquakes.
No damage was reported. The Survey gives the time of the tremor as 23:58:38,
GCT, with preliminary epicenter 35ûN, 119ûW, which is near Wheeler Ridge.
Santa Barbara News Press (Thursday, Feb. 11, 1954).
NO DAMAGE IN EARTHQUAKE. Chandeliers swayed and dishes and windows
rattled here just before 4:00 pm yesterday as an earthquake rocked the
area from here to Bakersfield. No damage was reported in any of the
areas where the tremblor was felt. The Caltech seismograph recorded
the shock at an intensity of between 4 and 4.5 on a scale of 10. The
epicenter was in Kern County.
|
1954
Mar 19
0154 hrs
|
BSSA, vol. 44, n. 3, p. 531.
March 19, 1954 - The strongest earthquake since the Tehachapi shocks
of 1952 jolted southern California from Ventura County to the Mexican
border and east to Las Vegas, Nevada, at 1:54:51 am PST. The main shock
was followed by a number of aftershocks, two of which were recorded
at 2:10 and 2:26 am.
|
1954
Aug 26
|
USDC, 41-1, p. 176, 1970 ed.
1954 Aug. 26 05:48 - Near Anacapa Island, 33.9N, 119.5W, int. VI (MM).
Plaster was shaken from ceiling in the Ventura County courthouse. M
4.8
The Oxnard Press-Courier, vol. 47, no. 48 (Thursday, Aug. 26,
1954).
Light Earthquake Jars Southland. A slight earthquake of 40 second duration
and timed at 6:49 am shook houses, rattled windows, and swayed beds
here today with slight damage reported at the Ventura County Courthouse.
In Oxnard one resident near the beach reported "It felt as though some
one was trying to get into my house." Another local resident said that
he thought "his roommate was raising the garage door."
-- "Sharp roll" in Ventura "Slight" in Santa Paula. 1954, Aug. 26,
05:48:
Santa Barbara News Press (Thursday, Aug. 26, 1954).
SHARP EARTHQUAKE FELT IN AREA. Many Santa Barbarans were jarred awake
this morning when a short, sharp earthquake rocked the area at 6:48.
No damage was reported. The shake was felt generally throughout the
Los Angeles area and as far north as here, with Ventura reporting about
the same intensity as Santa Barbara and Los Angeles slightly less. The
quake was believed centered offshore in the vicinity of the Channel
Islands.
The Caltech seismograph recorded it at an intensity of 4.5 on the
scale which rates the largest shocks ever recorded at 8.6. The epicenter
was reported as 70 miles southwest of Pasadena.
Ventura County Star Free Press, 79th year, no. 249 (Thursday,
Aug. 26, 1954).
BELIEVED NEVADA AFTERSHOCK: MILD QUAKE JOLTS VENTURA, LA AREA WITHOUT
DAMAGE.
Ventura was slightly jolted by a mild earthquake that shook up the
Los Angeles area today, and police said there were no reports of damage
here. Ventura County was rocked by the quake at 6:48 am, in a short
sharp roll that ended in a pronounced jolt. It was apparently the northernmost
point at which the quake was felt, according to United Press reports.
Believed to be an aftershock of recent tremblors near Fallon, Nevada,
which caused considerable damage to streets and buildings, the quake
had a magnitude of 4.5 on a scale of 12, according to the California
Institute of Technology. The Caltech statement said the quake was centered
about 70 miles SW of Pasadena, off the Los Angeles - Long Beach coastal
area.
Some Venturans reported feeling a number of minor tremors during the
night, and United Press said residents of Holister in San Benito County
were shaken twice at 2 am and 2:30 am by similar mild shocks.
|
1954
Nov 17
|
BSSA, Vol. 45, n. 2, p. 150.
November 17, 1954 - The only damage reported was cracked plaster in
the courthouse at Oxnard.
The Oxnard Press-Courier, vol. 49, no. 119 (Thursday, Nov. 18,
1954).
QUAKES ROCK CITY, VENTURA. Two short sharp earthquakes were felt in
Oxnard and Ventura yesterday afternoon but according to reports, there
was no damage in Oxnard and only slight damage in two rooms at the County
Court House in Ventura.
According to reports, the quakes hit shortly after 3 pm. A distinct
sharp jolt was felt at the court house causing small pieces of plaster
to fall from the ceilings of Judge Charles F. BlockstockÕs Superior
Court Room and the Law Library. In Oxnard, two brief rolling jolts were
felt, but according to police and fire departments, no damage was reported.
Ventura County Star Free Press, 80th year, no. 11 (Thursday, Nov.
18, 1954).
ROLL AND JOLT QUAKE AS FELT IN VENTURA. No damage was reported in yesterdayÕs
roll-and-jolt tremblor that shook Ventura, Los Angeles, and Pasadena,
authorities said today. The quake was felt in Ventura at 3:06 pm. Preliminary
readings from the California Institute of Technology showed the quake
originated about 60 miles from Pasadena, with a Richter scale magnitude
of 4. Buildings swayed in Santa Barbara, the Associated Press reported.
Dr. Charles Richter, Cal Tech seismologist, pin-pointed the quake as
having originated between Ventura and Santa Paula.
Santa Barbara News Press (Thursday, Nov. 18, 1954).
AREA FEELS MILD ROLL FROM QUAKE. An earthquake described in some southern
California communities as "short and sharp" jiggled the Santa Barbara
area with a mild roll yesterday at 3:04 pm. The "short and sharp" reports
came from Pasadena, Glendale, Burbank, Compton, Van Nuys, Hollywood
and LA. Ventura felt the same soft roll as Santa Barbara. No damage
was reported.
|
1955
May 29
0945 hrs
|
Santa Barbara News Press (Monday, May 30, 1955).
EARTHQUAKE GIVES CITY GENTLE SHAKE. Santa Barbara was gently shaken
by a light earthquake yesterday morning which also was felt in other
southern California communities. The Caltech seismograph timed the quake
at 9:45. Other communities reporting the jiggle were East Los Angeles
and Malibu Beach.
Ventura County Star Free Press, 80th year, no. 171 (Monday, May
30, 1955)
What may have been a minor earth temblor shook look a number of large
rocks and damaged three autos on Highway 101-A about 10 miles southeast
of Oxnard yesterday, according to reports today.
Oxnard police reported receiving numerous calls from residents of the
area around 9:45 a.m., but sheriffs officers and other law agencies
in the county did not report any earthquakes during the weekend.
|
1955
Nov 18
|
BSSA, Vol. 46, no. 1, p. 81.
November 18, 1955 - A slight earthquake was reported felt in the Santa
Barbara area at 11:20 PST.
|
1956
Aug 9
1708 hrs
|
Santa Barbara News Press (Thursday, Aug. 9, 1955).
NO DAMAGE HERE IN MINOR QUAKE. Apparently in this area, an earthquake
strong enough to rattle dishes in some homes was felt here at 5:08 pm
yesterday. There was no damage, according to information at police headquarters
and the sheriffÕs office. A number of telephone calls were received
at both offices after the shock. Some persons thought it might have
been a sonic blast, but seismographs show a minor earthquake had occurred.
|
1956
Oct 9
|
BSSA, Vol. 47, n. 1, p. 79.
October 9, 1956 - A light earthquake was thought to have rattled windows
in Oxnard, Port Hueneme, and Camarillo about 10:00 pm, PST.
The Oxnard Press-Courier, vol. 49, no. 85 (Wednesday, Oct. 10,
1955).
Minor Earthquake Reported in Oxnard. Police believe there was a minor
earthquake in Oxnard last night. The station received several calls
at 10:37 pm describing rattling windows and mysterious "prowlers". Port
Hueneme residents reported a "quake" shortly after 10 pm. Camarillo
residents reported rattling and a noise at 11 pm.
|
1957
Mar 18
1056 hrs
|
USDC.
1957 March 18 10:56 - South of Oxnard, 34.1N, 119.2W, int. VI (MM),
felt area 3,000 sq. mi., M 4.7.
Santa Barbara News Press (Monday, Mar. 18, 1957).
VENTURA JOLT BREAKS GLASS; NONE INJURED. An earthquake jolted Ventura
today, breaking windows and tumbling stock from shelves in stores. No
injuries were reported.
The rolling tremblor was felt moderately in Santa Barbara, touching
off a wave of calls to public agencies here from residents who wondered
mostly whether it rally had been a quake.
There were no reports of damage here. The Associated Press reported
that the shock at 10:56 am knocked one woman from her chair in Ventura,
according to a report received from police here.
Fire Quickly Controlled - A fire, apparently caused by broken power
lines, occurred at the Pt. Mugu Naval Air Missile Test Center near Ventura.
The fire was quickly controlled.
The new Shell office building at Ventura was reported evacuated and
at Oxnard, 10 miles to the southeast, authorities said liquor stores
suffered damage to stocks when bottles fell from shelves. Mirrors and
store windows were reported shattered.
Of Five Magnitude - The quake was of five in magnitude on a scale
of 10, according to Dr. Charles Richter of the Seismological Laboratory
at Caltech in Pasadena. Richter said the tremblor centered 100 to 200
miles from Pasadena, which is 15 miles from Ventura. Nearness of the
quakeÕs center was attested by two seismographs maintained by A. E.
Banks, local amateur seismologist. He said the tremor moved the points
on the instrument about 6 inches. Recent severe quakes in the Aleutian
Islands, he said, moved only two inches.
Ventura County Star Free Press, 82nd year, no. 112 (Monday, Mar.
18, 1957).
SHARP EARTHQUAKE JOLTS COAST; DAMAGE IN VENTURA, OXNARD NO INJURIES
ARE REPORTED IN BIG SHAKE.
A sharp, booming earthquake struck the coast of southern California
at about 10:58 this morning, the shake apparently being most violent
in Ventura and Oxnard, according to preliminary reports.
No injuries were reported. Damage was done to buildings in Ventura
... [cracked windows and walls]. Grocery stores reported goods being
shaken from the shelves...
The preliminary shakes were recorded at 10:56 and 10:57 on the California
Institute of Technology seismological instruments in Pasadena. A short
jolt was felt about 10:58 followed by a rolling aftershock. Center of
the quake was estimated at about 200 miles from Pasadena in a undetermined
direction, but believed to be offshore.
[damage summary: Oxnard - bricks fall off Masonic Temple, and a crack
reported in the building.] Sharpest effects of the quake were felt along
the coast. Ojai residents reported feeling the quake, said to be just
a short jolt. It was somewhat stronger in Casitas Springs. [Santa Paula
- Ôquick quiveringÕ but no damage. Fillmore - slight rolling felt. Point
Mugu - electrical fire caused by the apparent snapping of two power
lines together.]
Although the quake was believed to be centered offshore, reports from
San Nicolas Island navy installations to headquarters at Point Mugu
stated the quake was not felt at the islands.
Santa Barbara News Press (Tuesday, Mar. 19, 1957).
TWO VENTURA COUNTY CITIES SURVEY QUAKE DAMAGE. Ventura, March 19 -
Residents of Ventura County today surveyed damage caused by a sharp
earthquake that jolted buildings, hurled canned and bottled goods from
store shelves and resulted in the evacuation of several schools.
The earthquake, of medium intensity, struck at 10:59 am yesterday.
The initial shock was followed by a series of aftershocks, lasting for
about a minute and a half. Ventura, Port Heuneme and Oxnard appeared
the hardest hit. The quake, however, also was felt at Santa Barbara,
Fillmore and Santa Paula.
In Oxnard, windows were broken in downtown buildings, walls were cracked
in several structures, and cornices were jolted loose at two office
buildings. Damage was reported heavy in markets where thousands of cans
and bottles tumbled to the floor. The high school in Oxnard was ordered
closed until engineers inspected the building. Other schools in the
area were evacuated after the earthquake struck.
Ventura County Star Free Press, 82nd year, no. 113 (Tuesday, Mar.
19, 1957).
QUAKE DAMAGES OXNARD HIGH SCHOOL, CLASSES SUSPENDED. Heaviest damage
from yesterdayÕs medium intensity earthquake appeared to have occurred
in Oxnard where the union high school is being closed for the rest of
the week and intensive inspections were being carried out in Masonic
Temple and Santa Clara Catholic Church. [main building of the high school
apparently unusable for the future] Except for widening of cracks, falling
of plaster and scattered foodstuffs from the shelves of grocery stores,
the rest of the county appeared to have ridden out the quake in fairly
good shape. [another school and public buildings checked for damage
in Ventura County].
|
1957
Mar 21
|
Santa Barbara News Press (Thursday, Mar. 21, 1957).
AFTERSHOCK NOTED IN OXNARD REGION. Oxnard, March 21 - An aftershock
of MondayÕs earthquake gently rocked this region at 6:15 am, but no
damage was reported. A check of graphs at the Caltech Seismological
Laboratory in Pasadena showed the temblor was so mild it barely was
recorded. On Monday a quake with a magnitude of 5 cause bricks to tumble
from a facade of the Masonic Temple and several other buildings, including
the Oxnard High School, suffered wall cracks.
Ventura County Star Free Press, 82nd year, no. 115 (Thursday,
Mar. 21, 1957).
VENTURA, OXNARD JOLTED IN ÔGENTLEÕ EARTHQUAKE AFTERSHOCK HITS COASTAL
SECTION. An earthquake aftershock, described by seismologists as ÔgentleÕ
but felt by some as a sharp jolt, hit the Ventura and Oxnard area at
6:15 am today. No damage was reported.
In Pasadena, the California Institute of Technology said the tremblor
was so mild it barely was recorded. On the Richter scale it rated at
2.2. The seismologists said the quake center was about 80 miles from
Pasadena, probably in the Ventura-Oxnard area. A spokesman at the laboratory
said he was surprised any one felt it at all. Citizens who called the
authorities, however, described the single jolt as a fairly strong one.
A flurry of earthquakes around the world in the last three weeks has
raised questions of whether the tremblors came in bunches. But the Associated
Press said the seismologists still insist they donÕt.
10:57 pm - A few persons said they felt the tremblor as far south
as Los Angeles. Dr. Charles Richter of the CA Institute of Technology
Seismological Lab said the shock occurred 75 miles west of Pasadena
and had a magnitude of between 5 and 5 1/2 - strong enough to cause
light damage.
|
1957
Jul 2
|
Santa Barbara News Press (Tuesday, Jul. 2, 1957).
MINOR QUAKES RECORDED HERE; FEW DISTURBED. A series of minor earthquakes
was recorded early this morning on seismographs owned by A. E. Banks,
local amateur seismologist. Most Santa Barbara residents apparently
slept through the series of earth disturbances, but three officers at
California Highway Patrol headquarters here reported feeling the first
temblor. The News Press also received several calls of inquiry
from residents awakened by the tremors. Banks said his instruments recorded
the first quake at approximately 2:15 am, and the others at 2:23, 4:55,
6:10. and 7:30. "We must have been sitting right on top of it," Banks
said. He described the quakes as very minor in intensity. There were
no reports of damage in the area.
|
1958
Jul 13
2126 hrs
|
USDC
1958 July 13 21:26 - Off Carpinteria, 34.4N, 119.5W, int. V (MM),
felt area 5,000 sq. mi., M 4.7. Slight damage at Carpinteria, plaster
cracked, slight loss of fallen merchandise.
Ventura County Star Free Press, 83rd year, no. 213 (Monday, Jul.
14, 1958).
QUAKE JOLTS COUNTY, BUT ITÕS LIGHT. A light earthquake believed centered
offshore in the Santa Barbara Channel jolted homes in Ventura County
last night and chipped some plaster from a wall at the Ventura County
courthouse. Windows and dished rattled in Carpinteria from the "4 to
6" minor tremors reported by the wire services. The initial shock was
reported at 10:27 pm. A few persons said they felt the tremor as far
south as Los Angeles. Dr. Charles Richter of Caltech said the shock
occurred 75 miles west of Pasadena and had a magnitude of between 5
and 5 1/2 - strong enough to cause light damage.
Santa Barbara News Press (Monday, Jul. 14, 1958).
CITY AREA SHAKEN BY "BABY QUAKE." A "baby earthquake with all the characteristics
of a major one" hit the Santa Barbara area at 10:26 last night. The
initial shock lasted six seconds and was followed by about 25 distinct
lesser jolts which lasted until about 3:00 am today, said Archie E.
Banks, local seismologist.
Center of Shock - Dr. Charles Richter of the CaltechÕs Seismological
Laboratory said this morning the center of the shock occurred 75 miles
west of Pasadena and had a magnitude of between 5 and 5 1/2 - "strong
enough to cause light damage," he said, had the center not been under
the ocean. Banks rated the intensity in Santa Barbara at between 2 1/2
and 3, as measured on instruments at the Museum of Natural History.
First Jolt - The first jolt set off burglar alarms and stopped the
clock in the Santa Barbara Police Dept. at 10:26 pm. It was felt as
far south as Ventura and appeared to be strong in Carpinteria, where
some china was reported broken. It was not felt in Santa Maria. Banks
said the quake was a "baby earthquake with all the characteristics of
a major earthquake." He said the quake has apparently relieved pressure
that had been building up in a fault out in the channel and that the
area should now be "sitting pretty." The fault is not the San Andreas
one, he said.
Aftershocks - The aftershocks were the result of the adjustment following
the initial jolt, he said. The record of the quake can be seen in the
display case at the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History. Banks said
the shocks were watched last night on the four instruments there. Banks
said the instruments at the museum showed that the shocks were in a
north and south direction. The News Press received 89 phone calls concerning
the quake between 10:27 pm and midnight.
|
1958
Oct 2
|
BSSA, Vol. 49, n. 1, p. 117.
October 2, 1958 - Residents of the Santa Barbara area from Carpinteria
to Goleta felt an earthquake at 8:26 pm PST.
Santa Barbara News Press (Friday, Oct. 3, 1958).
EARTHQUAKE IS RECORDED HERE. An earth temblor of low intensity, yet
strong enough to be felt in many sections of the city, registered at
8:26 last night on seismographs at the Museum of Natural History. A.
E. Banks said the pattern of reports indicates the earthquake was "close
in." Residents from Carpinteria to Goleta reported feeling the slight
earth movement. Banks said the seismographs have been recording small
temblors for "the past three of four days," so slight they were apparently
not felt by residents.
|
1958
Nov 17
|
Santa Barbara News Press (Nov. 17, 1958).
LIGHT TREMOR RATTLES DISHES HERE. A slight, dish-rattling earthquake
at 1:36 am yesterday apparently was a minor tremor confined to the Santa
Barbara area, according to A. E. Banks, veteran amateur seismologist.
Banks, who has been studying earth tremors for many years, said it was
his impression that the quake was local in nature because the waves
were primarily vertical. He estimated that the intensity was perhaps
3.5 on the Richter scale, but emphasized that this was "only a guess."
He said he received two reports of plaster being cracked in homes. The
seismograph record of the tremor is on display at the Museum of Natural
History.
|
1959
Jul 1
2349 hrs
|
BSSA, Vol. 49, n. 4, p. 418 35ûN, 119.5ûW (USCGS).
July 1, 1959 - 23h 49m20s GCT, 35N, 119.5W (USCGS). The earthquake
was strongest in the Bakersfield area and was also felt in Taft, Porterville,
El Centro, Mojave, Buttonwillow, and Santa Barbara. No damage was reported.
Mag. 4.8 (Pas), 4.75 (Berk).
|
1959
Sep 30
2036 hrs
|
USDC
1959 Sept. 30 20:36 - Off coast of southern California, 34.4N, 120.6W,
int. VI, M 4.5, felt area 4,500 sq. mi.
Santa Barbara News Press (Thursday, Oct. 1, 1959).
3.5 EARTHQUAKE RATTLES DISHES, SHAKES BOULDERS.
A mild earth- quake last night startled residents along the coast
from San Francisco to Los Angeles, but the shock seemed to center at
Lompoc, where dishes were knocked from shelves and residents surprised.
A second, less sharp jolt followed a 1/2 hour later. Lompoc police reported
today that they knew of a few instances where dishes were reported broken
when jarred from shelves by the quake. Police said there were no further
reports of damage in the Lompoc area.
At Gaviota Pass, several large boulders were shaken loose and rolled
down on the southbound lane of HWY 101 at 8:38 pm. The California Highway
Patrol said the rocks did not impede traffic, but a highway crew removed
them from the highway for safety.
In Santa Barbara, many telephone calls were received by the police
and sheriffÕs officers, but no damage was reported. Some persons said
they did not feel the tremor at all. It was also felt by residents in
the San Fernando Valley.
The tremor, described as "a quick left, then right," roll from east
to west, was registered at 3.5 on the Richter scale of maximum of 10
at the Seismological Laboratory at the University of California at Berkeley.
In San Diego it registered as 2 on the same scale, although it was not
felt that far down the coast. In Santa Maria, the shock was discovered
as light, but at Vandenberg Air Force Base officers reported it was
hardly felt at all.
Ventura County Star Free Press, 84th year, no. 281 (Thursday,
Oct. 1, 1959).
An earthquake of "mild" proportions struck California last night, centering
in the Lompoc - Santa Maria area, but did no serious damage. The quake
occurred at 8:36 pm, resulting in broken dishes, ceiling cracks and
a number of startled residents. [description of minor landslide on US
101 at Gaviota Pass] The University of California seismograph at Berkeley
recorded a shock about 3.5 magnitude centered 210 miles away. The tremor
lasted 5 minutes. In Ventura, a few persons reported feeling the quake
but it was so mild here that it went almost unnoticed.
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